While there are some uneven elements to this series they're the kind that's only going to feel natural in trying to bring to life a series that's been dormant for a couple of decades. Keeping it ot the same time period, characters, and roughly style and approach as the original means it's going to feel a bit out of place even as you try to shift gradually to other storytelling methods. Guggenheim and Mutti did a solid job with it but it also ran through things pretty fast and shifted gears to a larger scale of events that I'm interested in but was just too much to cram into this run. I'm likely to come back if there's more but I'm hoping it's able to really figure things out more so that it's not as uneven next time around. Read Full Review

SWASHBUCKLERS: THE SAGA CONTINUES #5, strives to deliver big action on an epic scale. Despite some bumps, it remains entertaining with a unique setting and memorable characters. However, it may read better on the whole in a collected edition. Read Full Review